An alternative to market logic where resources flow through relationships of obligation, care, and mutual indebtedness that sustain community across lifespans.
Rabia practiced radical detachment from material possessions, giving freely because attachment to wealth binds the soul. Ubuntu cultures historically operated through gift economies where exchange created social bonds rather than mere transaction. This concept applies gift-logic across generations: knowledge is gifted from elders, labor from youth, wisdom from experience, energy from vitality. Nothing is truly 'owed' yet everything creates obligation to sustain the giver and pass forward. This disrupts extractive thinking. For intergenerational responsibility, gift economy means refusing the mindset that treats ancestors' land and labor as 'already paid for' or that youth owe nothing to community. Instead, all resources—inherited land, family stories, learned skills, accumulated wealth—carry invisible threads of gratitude and future obligation. We receive as gift, tend as stewards, and pass forward enriched. This reframes economics from accumulation to circulation, from individual gain to collective flourishing.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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